Just read a 681-word article on the dangers to human health of dry-cleaning chemicals, in which a single sentence mentions the potential harm to workers. The rest says not to worry about it unless you live above a dry-cleaner. Eat healthy. Drink less. It’s all about you, America!


If you’d like some historical perspective on the topic of political violence, I recommend the recent In Our Time episode on The Haymarket Affair. It’s a good listen. (If you’d like to escape to an entirely different time and place, try the episode on wormholes.)


In which the antique table apocalypse is strangely freeing

This morning a card table purportedly from the 1840s revealed itself to be a chimera, and a badly reassembled chimera at that, when it suddenly and violently fell over, sending the Christmas tree tumbling into the manger scene. I had not had the thing upside down since I learned enough about old furniture to recognize what I was looking at. Not only are the cabriole-ish legs attached to the base with splines (well—three are, one was), but the base itself was added later, to replace legs that were sawn off just underneath the tabletop.

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First art show! All set up at the Boylan Heights Art Walk in Raleigh this afternoon.

My booth with framed carvings


Cleaning out my study—sorry, _studio_— I found a bag of handcrafted items I seem to have purchased in past years as Christmas presents but never distributed, and I cannot now figure out who was supposed to get them. “Keep them!” you might say, but I really don’t need a stuffed-animal purse.


Happy Thanksgiving! If you’re interested in foodways, folkways, and weird alleys of American history, you may be interested in this series I wrote back in 2011 as an offshoot of some research on (mostly) 19th-century food and cooking, which I called “The Thanksgiving Issue.”


I love a hickory tree in November.

Hickory tree, bright gold leaves in the sun


Experimenting with more complex (and naturalistic) composition. At 8”x10” this is probably the largest carving I can make from a single panel. I like the birds in this one, particularly the little guy at lower left.

chip carving of a tree vined with Virginia creeper and five birds


Nine markets in thirty days starts tomorrow. Here’s the skinny if you’re local.


Where is your Scrooge-Cratchit line?